Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, University of California, San Francisco, 490 Illinois St, San Francisco, CA, 94107, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2021 Nov 22;21(1):1263. doi: 10.1186/s12913-021-07278-3.
Adolescents may forego needed sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services due to a variety of concerns and barriers. The purpose of this study is to compare adolescents' perceptions of these barriers by participant characteristics including race/ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, housing situation, and sexual experience.
Adolescents in a California-wide sexual health education program completed an anonymous survey at baseline (N = 10,015) about perceived barriers to using SRH services. Logistic regression analyses that accounted for the clustered data structure assessed differences by gender, age, sexual orientation, race/ethnicity, living situation, and sexual experience.
The majority of participants were Hispanic/Latino (76.4%) with an average age of 14.9 years, and 28.8% had sexual experience. Half of the youth reported concerns about test results (52.7%), cost of services (52.0%), and confidentiality of services (49.8%). When controlling for other characteristics, youth identifying as transgender/non-binary/multiple genders had the highest odds of perceiving cost (odds ratio (OR) 1.89) and confidentiality (OR 1.51) as barriers. Increasing age was associated with decreasing odds of all barriers. Sexual orientation was a consistent predictor, with LGBQ+ youth having higher odds of perceiving test results (OR 1.21), cost (OR 1.36), and confidentiality (OR 1.24) as barriers. Asian or Pacific Islander/Native Hawaiian youth had higher odds of perceiving test results (OR 1.68) and cost (OR 1.37) as barriers. In contrast, Black youth had lower odds of reporting cost (OR 0.65) and confidentiality (OR 0.77) as barriers. Younger respondents and youth who identified as female, transgender/non-binary/multiple genders, LGBQ+, and Asian or Pacific Islander/Native Hawaiian had higher odds of reporting five or more barriers compared to reference groups.
The majority of adolescents face barriers to accessing appropriate SRH services, with females, gender-minority youth, younger adolescents, LGBQ+ youth, and Asian and Pacific Islander/Native Hawaiian youth more likely than others to report barriers. Access to SRH services can be improved through strengthening linkages between clinics and SRH education programs, providing youth-friendly clinical services, and ensuring youth have sufficient information, skills, and support to access care.
Approved by California Health and Human Services Agency's Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects [12-08-0658, 11/30/2017].
青少年可能会因为各种担忧和障碍而放弃所需的性健康和生殖健康(SRH)服务。本研究的目的是比较青少年对这些障碍的看法,这些看法因参与者的特征而有所不同,包括种族/民族、性别、性取向、住房状况和性经验。
在加利福尼亚州范围内的一项性健康教育计划中,青少年在基线时(N=10015)完成了一项关于使用 SRH 服务时感知到的障碍的匿名调查。考虑到聚类数据结构的逻辑回归分析评估了性别、年龄、性取向、种族/民族、生活状况和性经验的差异。
大多数参与者是西班牙裔/拉丁裔(76.4%),平均年龄为 14.9 岁,28.8%有过性经验。一半的年轻人表示担心测试结果(52.7%)、服务费用(52.0%)和服务保密性(49.8%)。在控制其他特征的情况下,自认为是跨性别/非二元/多种性别的年轻人对成本(优势比(OR)1.89)和保密性(OR 1.51)的感知障碍的可能性最高。年龄越大,所有障碍的可能性越低。性取向是一个一致的预测因素,LGBQ+年轻人对测试结果(OR 1.21)、成本(OR 1.36)和保密性(OR 1.24)的感知障碍的可能性更高。亚洲或太平洋岛民/夏威夷原住民的年轻人对测试结果(OR 1.68)和成本(OR 1.37)的感知障碍的可能性更高。相比之下,黑人年轻人报告成本(OR 0.65)和保密性(OR 0.77)障碍的可能性较低。年轻的受访者和自认为是女性、跨性别/非二元/多种性别、LGBQ+以及亚洲或太平洋岛民/夏威夷原住民的年轻人比其他参考组更有可能报告有五个或更多障碍。
大多数青少年在获得适当的 SRH 服务方面面临障碍,女性、性别少数青少年、年轻青少年、LGBQ+青少年和亚洲及太平洋岛民/夏威夷原住民青少年比其他人更有可能报告障碍。可以通过加强诊所和 SRH 教育计划之间的联系、提供青少年友好的临床服务以及确保青少年有足够的信息、技能和支持来获得护理,从而改善 SRH 服务的获取。
加利福尼亚州卫生和人类服务机构保护人类受试者委员会批准[12-08-0658,2017 年 11 月 30 日]。